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5 Questions with Milton Katz, author of John B. McLendon Jr.,
Basketball Legend and Civil Rights Pioneer
1. What, specifically, inspired you to write this book?
As an idealistic student of the 1960s, I have chosen to focus my
scholarship on peace and justice movements in American history.
As a social historian, it is impossible to ignore the fact that
sports have been one of the primary mediums for breaking down racial
barriers in American society. For almost a century, African American
leaders around the country have looked to sports as one path toward
black advancement and racial reconciliation. Although most people
recognize the pioneering role of Jackie Robinson in the integration
of American sports, there was a diminutive, dignified, African American
coach named John B. McLendon Jr. who played an equally significant
role in this endeavor. A legendary basketball coach, McLendon was
also a pioneer, supreme innovator, teacher, and consummate gentleman
who waged a successful fight to break down barriers in college and
professional athletics.
2. What was your relationship to Coach McLendon?
I first met John B. McLendon in 1980 when I was conducting research
on the integration of the National Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics (NAIA) basketball tournament, which had taken place in
the 1950s. Although I had attended every NAIA tournament since my
family and I had moved to Kansas City in 1974, I had never before
been introduced to the man who was affectionately known as the “father
of black basketball,” and the individual who was primarily
responsible for integrating college basketball in Kansas City and
around the nation. What I was unaware of at the time, was that McLendon
broke through the color line in many areas of athletics and social
endeavors as well.
We spent many days and evenings together watching basketball and
talking about his life, the obstacles he had to overcome, and the
remarkable success he had over the years in doing so. He began to
call me “little brother,” and although I knew he treated
everyone as if they were members of his family, I took immense satisfaction
knowing that he and I were becoming close friends. We authored a
booklet together, Breaking Through: The NAIA and the Integration
of Intercollegiate Athletics in Post World War II America, in 1988,
and the following year were the headliners at an International Conference
on the role of sports in American popular culture at the North American
Culture Annual Conference in Toronto, Canada. Based on extensive
interviews conducted between 1987 and 1990, I authored an article
“Coach John B. McLendon Jr. and the Integration of Intercollegiate
and Professional Athletics in Post World War II America,”
which was published by the Journal of American Culture in December
1990.
3. What impressed you most about the man you chose to write
about?
As I spent several days interviewing him, I came to understand the
historic role he played in the modern civil rights movement. From
integrating the swimming pool when he was a student at the University
of Kansas to becoming the first black coach inducted into the Naismith
Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, this unassuming, gentle, soft-spoken
man was a giant in the struggle for equal rights in American society.
More than that, he was a writer, poet, historian, archivist, and
teacher. I soon discovered that he was a unique type of individual
who, acting out of faith, courage, and compassion, enhanced America’s
potential for integrity and justice. His faith in humankind and
ability to consistently do the right thing gave him superior judgement
and the confidence to pursue a wise course of action in bringing
about significant social change. John McLendon radiated a kind of
fundamental decency that everyone admired and respected.
4. Is there any relationship to the inspiring story of Texas Western’s
upset of the University of Kentucky in the 1966 NCAA basketball
championship final told in the movie Glory Road?
Although the film tells the story of a significant event in American
social history, it leaves out the salient fact that this glory road
was paved over with grit and determination a decade earlier by the
trailblazing efforts of John McLendon and the other founders of
the National Athletic Steering Committee. Twenty-two years before
the all-black starting five fromTexas Western captured the NCAA
championship from the all-white University of Kentucky, McLendon’s
black college squad from North Carolina College played an illegal
secret game against all-white team from Duke University Medical
School. And nine years before Texas Western’s triumph, McLendon’s
all-black Tennessee A&I State University Tigers defeated more
than a dozen white teams from throughout the United States, including
the South, to capture three consecutive NAIA national championships,
1957-1959. Of course, there was no national television audience
for these socially significant events, and currently there is no
movie to celebrate these groundbreaking victories. Therefore, the
equally glorious road of McLendon and his players remains largely
unknown, and yet, he and superlative players, five of whom later
played in the NBA, helped us get where we are today.
5. What would you like people to take from reading your
book?
Perhaps a deeper understanding and appreciation that movements for
social change are made by countless numbers of ordinary individuals
whose struggle for equality and justice alter the course of human
history. We often forget that history is actually made by people
much like ourselves who commit their minds, their energies, and
their lives to obtaining freedom and dignity for all. John B. McLendon
Jr. was much more than just a highly successful basketball coach.
He was one of those individuals whose remarkable courage, unswerving
determination, and moral strength in the pursuit of human rights
and social justice brought democracy in America a step closer to
reality.
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